Edited by Murray Stein and Thomas Arzt, the essays in the series Jung's
Red Book for Our Time: Searching for Soul under Postmodern Conditions
are geared to the recognition that the posthumous publication of The
Red Book: Liber Novus by C. G. Jung in 2009 was a meaningful gift to
our contemporary world.
"To give birth to the ancient in a new time is creation," Jung inscribed
in his Red Book. The essays in this volume continue what was begun in
Volume 1 of Jung's Red Book for Our Time: Searching for Soul under
Postmodern Conditions by further contextualizing The Red Book
culturally and interpreting it for our time. It is significant that this
long sequestered work was published during a period in human history
marked by disruption, cultural disintegration, broken boundaries, and
acute anxiety. The Red Book offers an antidote for this collective
illness and can be seen as a link in the aurea catena, the "golden
chain" of spiritual wisdom extending down through the ages from biblical
times, ancient Greek philosophy, early Christian and Jewish Gnosis, and
alchemy. The Red Book is itself a work of creation that gives birth to
the old in a new time.
This is the second volume of a three-volume series set up on a global
und multicultural level and includes essays from the following
distinguished Jungian analysts and scholars:
- Murray Stein and Thomas Arzt: Introduction
- John Beebe: The Way Cultural Attitudes are Developed in Jung's
Red Book - An "Interview"
- Kate Burns: Soul's Desire to become New: Jung's Journey, Our
Initiation
- QiRe Ching: Aging with The Red Book
- Al Collins: Dreaming The Red Book Onward: What Do the Dead Seek
Today?
- Lionel Corbett: The Red Book as a Religious Text
- John Dourley: Jung, the Nothing and the All
- Randy Fertel: Trickster, His Apocalyptic Brother, and a World's
Unmaking: An Archetypal Reading of Donald Trump
- Noa Schwartz Feuerstein: India in The Red Book: Overtones and
Undertones
- Grazina Gudaite: Integrating Horizontal and Vertical Dimensions
of Experience under Postmodern Conditions
- Lev Khegai: The Red Book of C.G. Jung and Russian Thought
- Günter Langwieler: A Lesson in Peacemaking: The Mystery of
Self-Sacrifice in The Red Book
- Keiron Le Grice: The Metamorphosis of the Gods: Archetypal
Astrology and the Transformation of the God-Image in The Red Book
- Ann Chia-Yi Li: The Receptive and the Creative: Jung's Red Book
for Our Time in Light of Daoist Alchemy
- Romano Màdera: The Quest for Meaning after God's Death in an Era
of Chaos
- Joerg Rasche: On Salome and the Emancipation of Woman in The Red
Book
- J. Gary Sparks: Abraxas: Then and Now
- David Tacey: The Return of the Sacred in an Age of Terror
- Ann Belford Ulanov: Blundering into the Work of Redemption